This section describes how to rebuild or repair tables or indexes, which may be necessitated by:
- Changes to how MySQL handles data types or character sets. For example, an error in a collation might have been corrected, necessitating a table rebuild to update the indexes for character columns that use the collation. 
- Required table repairs or upgrades reported by - CHECK TABLEor mysqlcheck.
Methods for rebuilding a table include:
If you are rebuilding tables because a different version of MySQL cannot handle them after a binary (in-place) upgrade or downgrade, you must use the dump-and-reload method. Dump the tables before upgrading or downgrading using your original version of MySQL. Then reload the tables after upgrading or downgrading.
If you use the dump-and-reload method of rebuilding tables only for the purpose of rebuilding indexes, you can perform the dump either before or after upgrading or downgrading. Reloading still must be done afterward.
        If you need to rebuild an InnoDB table
        because a CHECK TABLE operation
        indicates that a table upgrade is required, use
        mysqldump to create a dump file and
        mysql to reload the file. If the
        CHECK TABLE operation indicates
        that there is a corruption or causes InnoDB
        to fail, refer to Section 17.20.3, “Forcing InnoDB Recovery” for
        information about using the
        innodb_force_recovery option to
        restart InnoDB. To understand the type of
        problem that CHECK TABLE may be
        encountering, refer to the InnoDB notes in
        Section 15.7.3.2, “CHECK TABLE Statement”.
      
To rebuild a table by dumping and reloading it, use mysqldump to create a dump file and mysql to reload the file:
mysqldump db_name t1 > dump.sql
mysql db_name < dump.sqlTo rebuild all the tables in a single database, specify the database name without any following table name:
mysqldump db_name > dump.sql
mysql db_name < dump.sql
        To rebuild all tables in all databases, use the
        --all-databases option:
      
mysqldump --all-databases > dump.sql
mysql < dump.sql
        To rebuild a table with ALTER
        TABLE, use a “null” alteration; that is,
        an ALTER TABLE statement that
        “changes” the table to use the storage engine that
        it already has. For example, if t1 is an
        InnoDB table, use this statement:
      
ALTER TABLE t1 ENGINE = InnoDB;
        If you are not sure which storage engine to specify in the
        ALTER TABLE statement, use
        SHOW CREATE TABLE to display the
        table definition.
        The REPAIR TABLE method is only
        applicable to MyISAM,
        ARCHIVE, and CSV tables.
      
        You can use REPAIR TABLE if the
        table checking operation indicates that there is a corruption or
        that an upgrade is required. For example, to repair a
        MyISAM table, use this statement:
      
REPAIR TABLE t1;
        mysqlcheck --repair provides command-line
        access to the REPAIR TABLE
        statement. This can be a more convenient means of repairing
        tables because you can use the
        --databases or
        --all-databases option to
        repair all tables in specific databases or all databases,
        respectively:
      
mysqlcheck --repair --databases db_name ...
mysqlcheck --repair --all-databases